■ Forgotten film Odd, non-classic films have quality entertainment value Horror films that trumpet over-the-top gory imagery are meant to scare viewers, hut induce laughing instead BY RYAN NYBURG PULSE EDITOR The Forgotten Films feature is usually a way for the writer to in form readers about a movie that has been undeservedly lost in the sands of time. But this time I’ve decided to do something a little different, namely inform the readers about any old crap that 1 think they should see. And since one great film is worth four bad ones, I’ve decided to offer critiques of four movies rather than one. While none of these films are classics, they do possess oodles of entertainment value, which is more than you can say for plenty of the cinematic offerings out there to day. Most of these films also have some further cultural significance worth touching on. Some of them are just worth mentioning anyway. To start things off, we have “The House on Haunted Hill.” Not to be confused with the soulless 1999 re make, the original 1959 film stars Vin cent Price as the owner of a creepy ass house. He offers a group of people $10,000 apiece if they’ll spend the night in the place. The doors and win dows are sealed shut until daylight and the guests wait out the night. Everything is mildly spooky until the owner’s wife is found hanging from a rafter. Directed by William Castle, one of the great schlock purveyors of the 1950s, the film is full of comically macabre imagery. (My personal fave is when Price presents each of his guests with a coffin-shaped box con taining their own pistol.) The film is enjoyable due to its over-the-top attempts to scare peo ple, and it contains some of the most delightfully absurd dialogue ever found in a horror film. At one point Price says to his wife, “Remember that time you poisoned me with arsenic? What fun we had.” If you’re in the market for a DVD of this, 1 would recommend the 2001 Diamond Entertainment release. Though that company is not known for its quality transfers, this edition actually looks great and is doubled up with another Price film, 1964’s “The Last Man on Earth.” Now if you want to know what BOYS! FIG8? BACK.. .BITE BACK WITH OfiACUU FANGS! GIRLS! . defend wwm wmi zombie eybi GET YOURS FREE AS YOU ENTER THE THEATRE! Courtesy 'The Plague of the Zombies’ is a slow-paced but effective film, can make a bad film endlessly enter taining, this next movie is the one to check out. Released in 1968 by Eng land’s Hammer film studios, “The Lost Continent” begins with a plot about a ship lost at sea that ends up trapped in a bizarre island dominat ed by man-eating seaweed, the sur vivors of other lost ships and a plethora of vicious, giant puppets. The plot takes so many twists and turns that it often seems as if the screenwriter is just free associating. The surreal atmosphere of the pro duction adds to the bizarre tone of the film, and all of it feels like two or three movies were involved in a near-fatal collision. For this film, 1 would suggest pick ing up the Hammer Collection edi tion put out by Anchor Bay Enter tainment. The main assets of this version are the Technicolor print and its paring with another Hammer classic, 1966’s “The Reptile.” While we’re on the subject of Ham mer, another good one to check out is “The Plague of the Zombies," also re leased in 1966. The story concerns a doctor in a small English town who has to deal with a series of mysterious deaths. Enlisting the help of his men tor, the two doctors discover that the deaths are being caused by the town’s overlord, who is resurrecting the bod ies with voodoo rites and using them to run a nickel mine underneath the city. Though the film is slowly placed, it makes up for it with pure atmos phere and mood, occasionally coming up with some genuinely ghastly mo ments. Once again I would suggest the Hammer Collection version of the film, which is remastered well. Speaking of zombies, the last film on the list is 1932’s “White Zombie.” Best known for being the namesake of Rob Zombie’s old band, the film stars Bela Lugosi as a witch doctor who uses zombie slave labor in Haiti. He is asked by a jealous man to take control of another man’s fiance. Disgusted by the woman’s emotionless state, the man asks Lugosi to change her back, but is instead turned into a zombie himself. You can probably pick it up from there. The film is actually the first cinematic attempt to deal with the subject of zombies and has some oddly gothic moments. The set design (the matte paintings are really incredi ble) and the production are all top notch for the time, but the film suffers from pacing problems. It’s still worth checking out. The original print of the film disin tegrated decades ago, so decent copies of this are hard to find. 1 would suggest the 1999 Roan Group release, which is the best version available and has some nice extra features. If quality isn’t too much of a concern, pick up the 2002 Madacy Entertain ment edition. In exchange for quality you get two other hard to find Lugosi films, 1942’s “The Corpse Vanishes” and 1947’s “Scared to Death.” ryannybu.rg@dailyememld.com IN BRIEF 'Shrek 2' lives happily ever after at the top of the charts Any cartoon that can squeeze in songs from such dark souls as Tom Waits and Nick Cave is all right by us. In case you've been living in a swamp the past year, 2004's top grossing hit reunites the vocal tal ents of Mike Myers and Cameron Diaz as newlywed ogres and Eddie Murphy as their donkey pal in a not so-happily-ever-after animated fol low-up. DVD featurettes have some lighthearted cast interviews, along with the directors and their technical crew discussing techniques used to bring more lifelike qualities to the computer-generated characters. 'Dr. Strangelove': Nuclear paranoia 40 years later Forty years later, they’re still fighting in the war room. Stanley Kubrick's 1964 black-comedy masterpiece gets yet another DVD makeover with a two-disc 40th anniversary edition. Peter Sellers leads the cast with three key roles in the nuclear-doomsday farce, co-star ring George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden and Slim Pickens. Among new DVD extras are a Sellers retrospective, a documentary about the nuclear paranoia of the era, an essay on the film by critic Roger Ebert and an inter view with Robert S. McNamara, de fense secretary for Lyndon Johnson. — The Associated Press f Hell That Time Forgot! SEE! BLOOD-BEASTS battling over female flesh I TORTURE PITS for forbidden lovers! SACRIFICE to giant jaw-snapping mollusks! ESCAPE from floating death ship I BEAUTIES attacked by crazed kelp-monsters! FIERY DESTRUCTION of the Lost Continent! mu % HIlDfGARD mmk UMiY BIWTO IKK D MICHAR MtCMAEL s,m-M kins wern l jimmy EsxstwjaKji Color by Oe Luxe x stvtN Mti-Mtttt wococnoK Courtesy The Hammer classic 'The Lost Continent’ combines bizarre imagery with an im plausible script to make an interesting, oddball adventure film. QiMnonin IIIIUISUIU MflJHGE. flEU. niUIflB. ORIGIDRL BESIGIB. HOT. flEU BUS. SELL ME. fi-SH 12-1. 1016 UlLLfiflEUE. 541.6811511 C«»a Burrer 1525 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, OR 97402 541-343-2828 11:30am-9:00pm Daily Next to Campus ALL YOU CAN EAT (every night $7.99 includes drink and ice cream) come eat buffet-style or order to go Szechwan and Mandarin dishes to choose from The Best Coffee In Town